From: michael a. lebowitz (mlebowit@SFU.CA)
Date: Wed May 18 2005 - 12:43:30 EDT
Dear John, I don't want to take up any more of your time, and I have too many deadlines and meetings pressing on me to engage further. I hope that we can find some time to talk when you will be here before I head off to the Historical Materialism/ Socialist Register/ Deutscher Memorial Prize conference in London the first weekend in November. I find that in a face-to-face exchange, it is more difficult to waffle and avoid answering points. For example, I asked for your position on a number of specifics in relation to the real world of Venezuela. I proposed: 'Here, I think, is an excellent opportunity to move away from vague generalizations about the state to a concrete application.' And, after noting a few developments, I indicated: >It is what they are trying to do nowto change the state, to coordinate >these missions within new ministries, to foster popular participation in >planning at municipal and parish level, to introduce worker-management in >state firms and to expand it into the private sector, to create a state of >the Paris Commune-type (the kind that Marx advocated). > But, you would say, I infer--- that’s the mistake, talking > about a revolutionary state! How can there be a revolutionary state? The > state is ‘the assassin of hope’: ‘to struggle through the state is to > become involved in the active process of defeating yourself’. Since the > state, after all, is a form of capital, you can not use it against capital. > So, would you have opposed the very idea of a new > constitution in Venezuela because it reinforces illusions about 'the > state paradigm'? Would you have opposed the decentralising aspects of > that constitution because the state is the state is the state--- i.e., > the state by any other name is still capital? Would you reject the idea > of attempting to make inroads (especially the ‘despotic inroads’ referred > to in the Communist Manifesto) because ‘the state (any state) must do > everything it can to provide conditions that favour the profitability of > capital’ [your attachment]? Finally, would you reject the idea of using > the power of the Bolivarian state against capital because what is needed > is not power but ‘anti-power’? > I suggest to you that you cannot be consistent with your book > and not be an opponent of the Bolivarian Revolution. Your response was to provide a taxonomic lesson on the concept of 'a state of the Paris Commune-type'. Well, I suppose that was an answer. I hope you have been more responsive to specifics in the answer to my critique in Historical Materialism. Best wishes, michael PS. I've searched for what you might mean in referring to my 'own offensive and nonsensical remark about the zapatistas'. It must refer to my comments in the note to Jerry Levy. It certainly wouldn't be my statement that 'I think the Zapatistas represent an important struggle for human dignity.' I'm sure it also wasn't that I said the Zapatistas should not be equated with Venezuela (since you've said something similar, if I recall correctly). So, by process of elimination, it must be my comment in response to Jerry's statement that both the Zapatistas and Venezuela 'are under attack by imperialism' to which I responded that 'I hadn't really noticed that the zapatistas were under attack by imperialism.' It's true--- I don't think the Zapatistas are showing up on US imperialism's screen. If you find that 'offensive and nonsensical', it may have to do with your own emotional commitment to the Zapatistas and how much you've staked on them. At 17:16 17/05/2005, you wrote: >Dear Michael, > > Sorry to be slow again. > > I’ll take some of your most important points: > > On the question of the book being dogmatic: The main aim of the book > was to get people talking and thinking about revolution – revolution in > the sense of the abolition of capitalism and the creation of a communist > society (however one might interpret that). Very explicitly the aim was > to promote a discussion on the basis of the acceptance of the fact that > we do not know how to make revolution. Within that framework I put > forward the argument that capitalism cannot be abolished through the > taking of state power, and at the end of the book I say “but we still do > not know how to make the revolution, we have to think, we have to > discuss.” In other words, I have my views, to which I am strongly > committed and which I will put forward forcefully, but I want to discuss > these views. As I said before, I see the argument as taking place within > a movement, not as dividing the movement and not as leading the movement. > Preguntando caminamos (asking we walk) is a central thread in the > argument and structure of the book. I do not particularly want to defend > the book for the sake of defending it, but I do not think this approach > is dogmatic. And, as I mentioned before, the best commentaries have > understood the book in this sense, saying in effect “Yes, let’s talk > about revolution. I do not agree with you and this is why I think your > argument is wrong and dangerous.” This sort of response from people who > disagree with me I respect enormously. (There have of course been lots of > others that proceed only be denunciation and disqualification.) > > You say that the Venezuelan government is trying “to create a state > of the Paris Commune-type (the kind that Marx advocated).” You use > basically the same expression in your review of my book. Jerry pointed > out that >Most anarchists wouldn't agree that the Paris Commune was a > state.< to which you replied >If you've read John's book, tell me what > you think he means by the state > >and its relation to the Commune; he made efforts to ground his argument in >Marx but I don't recall any mention.< > It is fundamental to the argument of the book that the > expression “a state of the Paris Commune-type” makes no sense at all. The > state is a particular form of social relations grounded in the separation > of the political from the economic and the separation of the public from > social control and the commune is exactly the opposite – a form of social > relations directed against the separation of the political from the > economic and the subjection of society to social control. The commune is > a quite distinct form of social organisation from the state, a form > viscerally opposed to the state. To think of the state as any form of > social organisation makes the whole discussion meaningless. The state is > always a process of forming social relations (that is social struggles) > in a certain way, the commune as an organisational form forms them or > shapes them in a different way. When you say that “the state has played a > central role in the struggle against the old order in Venezuela”, then I > am not sure what this means. Clearly the struggle did not originate in > the state: it originated as a class struggle, a popular struggle against > the manifestations of capitalism. In the 1990s it clearly became focussed > on the state and the winning of state power, and the process has been > organised to a fairly large extent through the state in the last few > years. My question is how this form of organisation affects the > development of the struggle. Has it, for example, had the effect of > diverting anti-capitalist struggle into the form of anti-imperialism, a > form quite compatible with the continuation of exploitation and private > ownership? I do not know, I ask. You say, in effect (and translating you > into my terms) that the state has been trying to overcome its separation > from society, to dissolve itself as a state and convert itself into a > form of communal or council organisation. Is that what you’re saying, is > that really what’s happening? And if that is what you’re saying, can it > really work? Is it possible for a state to dissolve itself into a > radically different form of organisation, or will the established > practices both of state functionaries and of the people themselves, and > the integration of the state into the global multiplicity of states and > above all the global movement of capital, not make that impossible? I > ask. Has the Venezuelan state managed to liberate itself from the need to > secure the profitability of capital? And if it has not broken from that > need, does that mean that it necessarily promote the exploitation of > labour? And if it has broken the need to secure profitability, this > presumably can only be on the basis of the creation of an anti-capitalist > form of social organisation. Is this what’s happening? It seems to me > that you start thinking from the state (very understandable in your > current situation) whereas we need to think from society and from social > struggle, class struggle. > > I do not doubt your sincerity, your enthusiasm glows. I do not > particularly doubt the sincerity of Hugo Chávez and of the many, many > people struggling for a radical transformation of society in Venezuela, > but I do have these doubts and questions. Of course I support the > struggles in Venezuela, my question, as I have said from the beginning, > concerns the relation between this struggle and the state as an > organisational form. I still feel that to focus struggle on the state is > self-defeating: if you say that the state is dissolving itself, I am > delighted but dubious. Beyond this I am reluctant to make pronouncements > about what is happening in Venezuela: partly I take warning from your own > offensive and nonsensical remark about the zapatistas. > > Another point: you say that the turn away from the state which is > characteristic of many struggles in Latin America and elsewhere is ‘the > stuff… of a period of defeat.’ Not surprisingly, I disagree completely. > To put it in autonomist terms, the turn from the state is a mark not of > the decomposition of the working class, but of its recomposition, and it > is very important for Marxists to understand this. > > Enough for now. My trip to Venezuela is currently planned for the > last week in October, so I hope we can meet there and carry on discussing. > > John > > > > > > > >Dear John, > My apologies for the delay in responding--- a very > recalcitrant chapter is the principal reason (although intermittent > problems with my internet connection have contributed, and I don’t know > how quickly this will post). > Thank you for the response and the attachment. You sound like > a nice person, and I look forward to a direct discussion--- although, if > your visit is in November (as I recall someone mentioning), we may miss > each other because I’ll be in Europe in the early part of the month. > I think we agree on the ultimate goal. The question, of > course, is how to get there. And, here, we disagree profoundly (as you > know from my Historical Materialism critique)--- not only on the specific > means (such as the need for a political instrument and the role of the > state) but also on what I describe as your ‘No to Marx,’ your reversion > to Hegelian Idealism, and your premise of the fragility of capitalism. > But, there is another criticism that runs through my > discussion: despite all the statements in your book about how no one, no > thinkers, no leaders, etc have any privileged understanding of history, > of struggles, etc, I find your book incredibly dogmatic. As I said at one > point in my comment, ‘Holloway, who screams his rejection of the “Knower” > as vanguardist, does not hesitate to instruct real people on the correct > struggles and to explain why some struggles contribute to dividing the > working class.’ > Accordingly, I find the statement in your response that ‘it > makes no sense at all to assert dogmas as though we possessed the correct > line’ as rather disingenuous (to say the least). What are the following > statements that I quoted from your book if they are not dogmatic > statements of the correct line? > >‘the very notion that society can be changed through the winning of state >power’ is the source of all our sense of betrayal, and we need to >understand that ‘to struggle through the state is to become involved in >the active process of defeating yourself’ (12-3, 214) > > > To retain the idea that you can change the world through the state > (whether by winning elections or by revolution) is a grave error--- one > which has failed to learn from history and theory that the state > paradigm, rather than being ‘the vehicle of hope’, is the ‘assassin of > hope’ (12). For one, the state does not have the power to challenge > capital: ‘what the state does and can do is limited by the need to > maintain the system of capitalist organisation of which it is a part.’ It > is ‘just one node in a web of social relations’ (13). > > > > There are many more such assertions (such as a rejection of > armed struggle and national liberation movements), of course, which are > all part of your argument against seeking power to destroy (fragile) > capitalism--- an argument that I find not only dogmatic but wrong. > Obviously, we can’t (and shouldn’t) debate here all the > specific points I raised in my critique (and to which I hope you have > responded in Historical Materialism with specifics rather than vague > restatements of your position). I cited the statements above, though, > after what I considered (in the light of your book) your quite undogmatic > but vague response to Paul Zarembka’s question about your view of the > Bolivarian Revolution. Here, I think, is an excellent opportunity to move > away from vague generalizations about the state to a concrete application. > After all, it is no secret that the state has played a > central role in the struggle against the old order in Venezuela. Not > precisely the same state, though. Because the constitutional assembly > began by changing ground rules--- writing a new constitution which > decentralises power to communities, local planning committees, and > commits the state to foster self-management and co-management and > cooperatives in state bodies and society as a whole. Not the same > state--- because the clientalistic and corrupt state of the Fourth > Republic thwarted the efforts to transform the society, and so the > government found it necessary to create Mission after Mission, a parallel > state, to move forward. As the current foreign minister said last year > around this time, we have a revolutionary government but we don’t have a > revolutionary state. It is what they are trying to do nowto change the > state, to coordinate these missions within new ministries, to foster > popular participation in planning at municipal and parish level, to > introduce worker-management in state firms and to expand it into the > private sector, to create a state of the Paris Commune-type (the kind > that Marx advocated). > But, you would say, I infer--- that’s the mistake, talking > about a revolutionary state! How can there be a revolutionary state? The > state is ‘the assassin of hope’: ‘to struggle through the state is to > become involved in the active process of defeating yourself’. Since the > state, after all, is a form of capital, you can not use it against capital. > So, would you have opposed the very idea of a new > constitution in Venezuela because it reinforces illusions about 'the > state paradigm'? Would you have opposed the decentralising aspects of > that constitution because the state is the state is the state--- i.e., > the state by any other name is still capital? Would you reject the idea > of attempting to make inroads (especially the ‘despotic inroads’ referred > to in the Communist Manifesto) because ‘the state (any state) must do > everything it can to provide conditions that favour the profitability of > capital’ [your attachment]? Finally, would you reject the idea of using > the power of the Bolivarian state against capital because what is needed > is not power but ‘anti-power’? > I suggest to you that you cannot be consistent with your book > and not be an opponent of the Bolivarian Revolution. I hope, of course, > that you are not an opponent--- despite the fact that it has departed so > significantly from your perspective. That is why I asked, do you stand > behind the arguments in your book? > Finally, let me say that I agree with you that your book is > not responsible for the trend in Latin America and elsewhere to ‘turn > away from the idea of taking state power’. As I suggested in my critique, > this is ‘the stuff… of a period of defeat.’ What your book has done, > however, is to provide theoretical support for this trend and thereby to > help spread its influence. Since I regard this trend as destructive of > any chance of destroying capitalist power and building a new society, you > will understand that I consider it necessary to struggle vigorously > against your arguments in the battle of ideas. > Of course, there are many problems in Venezuela. Some because > of the very magnitude of what must be done. Others, I would say, because > a state of a new type and a party of a new type have yet to come > together. Since there is so much to see here and learn from, I am glad > that you will be coming here to see the hope that this revolution has > produced in so many people. (I certainly have learned much.) I only wish > you were coming not for the purpose of discussing your book in a > week-long seminar but to listen and learn for a longer period. The > Bolivarian revolution could use a champion with your obvious skills. > Sincerely, > michael > >Michael A. Lebowitz >Professor Emeritus >Economics Department >Simon Fraser University >Burnaby, B.C., Canada V5A 1S6 > >Currently based in Venezuela. Can be reached at >Residencias Anauco Suites >Departamento 601 >Parque Central, Zona Postal 1010, Oficina 1 >Caracas, Venezuela >(58-212) 573-4111 >fax: (58-212) 573-7724 > Michael A. Lebowitz Professor Emeritus Economics Department Simon Fraser University Burnaby, B.C., Canada V5A 1S6 Currently based in Venezuela. Can be reached at Residencias Anauco Suites Departamento 601 Parque Central, Zona Postal 1010, Oficina 1 Caracas, Venezuela (58-212) 573-4111 fax: (58-212) 573-7724
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